You're reading: New trial of Ukraine’s Tymoshenko put off to Aug. 14

KHARKIV, Ukraine - A Ukrainian court resumed a tax evasion case on Tuesday against jailed ex-prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, but then postponed the hearing for two weeks after a wrangle over whether she could take part in proceedings by video-link from her hospital bed.

Tymoshenko is already serving a seven-year sentence for
alleged abuse of office but has been moved from prison in the
eastern city of Kharkiv to a clinic for treatment for a chronic
back condition.

The new hearing in Kharkiv on charges of tax evasion and
embezzlement has already been put off several times since a
formal opening in mid-April because her treatment ruled out her
attendance.

More than a 1,000 supporters and opponents of Tymoshenko,
whose prosecution and jailing has soured relations between the
former Soviet republic and the European Union, gathered outside
the courtroom in Kharkiv when the case resumed.

But judge Kostyantyn Sadovsky ordered another postponement
until Aug. 14 after Tymoshenko’s counsel refused a submission by
the prosecution that she could take part in proceedings by
video-link from hospital.

“I declare that I do not agree to take part in a
video-conference,” Tymoshenko said in a personal statement read
to the court by her lawyer, Serhiy Vlasenko.

The break might allow the issue to be clarified, Sadovsky
said.

When the trial resumed on Tuesday, Tymoshenko was again
absent. German doctors who have been treating her said on Monday
that her phsyical condition required up to eight more weeks of
attention.

In the new case Tymoshenko, 51, denies the tax evasion and
embezzlement charges, which go back to the 1990s when she was a
prominent businesswoman.

Prosecutors say Tymoshenko’s now-defunct gas trading company
caused losses to the state equivalent to about $4 million, while
she personally evaded paying $85,000 in taxes.

Tymoshenko, President Viktor Yanukovich’s main political
opponent, was jailed for alleged abuse of office as prime
minister relating to a gas deal which she brokered with Russia.

The government says the 2009 deal saddled Ukraine with an
unfair price for gas imports which has hamstrung the economy.

She says she is the victim of a vendetta by Yanukovich who
defeated her in a fight for the presidency in February 2010.

The EU, which says her prosecution smacks of selective
justice, has shelved landmark deals on free trade and political
association in response to Tymoshenko’s conviction last year.

Tymoshenko was a leader of the 2004 Orange Revolution
protests that derailed Yanukovich’s first bid for the presidency
and has since been prime minister twice.

Since losing the 2010 presidential election to Yanukovich in
a close run-off, Tymoshenko and a number of her opposition
allies have faced corruption-related charges which Tymoshenko
has dismissed as political vengeance.

Even though her controversial imprisonment bars her from
running for election, Tymoshenko symbolically heads a candidate
list put forward by an opposition coalition for a parliamentary
election in October.

Her opponents outside the courtoom on Tuesday carried
posters denouncing her with slogans such as “Keep her in prison!
She is a thief!”. Supporters of Tymoshenko and her Batkivshchyna
(Fatherland) party wore T-shirts bearing her peasant-braided
portrait and chanted “Yulia – Freedom!”.